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Reza Iravani

Toronto’s electrical system is a little smarter now, thanks in part to a U of T team led by Professor Reza Iravani (ECE).

Toronto Hydro has installed a 250-kW, 48-module battery storage unit at the Roding Arena and Community Centre in North York. The battery system can power a small street for one hour. But what makes the unit unique, according to Professor Iravani, is that it is connected to the Toronto Hydro power grid, and can store energy during off-peak times and release it back into the grid as needed. The system can also store and release power added to the grid by solar energy panels installed at the community centre.

Some of the 48 batteries
Some of the 48 batteries

The project was developed by a consortium consisting of Toronto Hydro, Markham-based eCAMION, Korean battery manufacturer Dow-Kokam and U of T. Professor Iravani and his team developed and implemented the algorithms that integrate the battery system, through a power electronic converter, in the Toronto Hydro grid.

“This is not just an academic research project,” said Professor Iravani, the coordinator of U of T’s Centre for Applied Power Electronics. “We had to deliver a functioning system with the high degree of reliability that Toronto Hydro requires.”

“We’re providing the brain for the operation of this battery system to appropriately integrate it into Toronto Hydro’s distribution grid.”

Depending on information the energy storage unit receives from the distribution grid, it will either store power in the battery system, or, if the grid is overloaded, discharge energy back into the system.

The Roding Community Centre battery unit is the first of three that will be installed in a Toronto Hydro ‘smart grid’ pilot project. A smart grid uses information and communications technology to automatically gather and act on supply and consumption information to improve the efficiency, reliability, cost and sustainability of electricity production and distribution.

The power unit outside the Roding Arena.
The power unit outside the Roding Arena.

But smart grids need coordination, timing algorithms  and communication protocols in order to work. “It requires major changes in the conventional approach for the operation of utility grids,” said Professor Iravani.

Toronto Hydro notes that the current electrical infrastructure is aging, with some of it dating back to the 1940s. Upgrading the system to include “smart technology” will give the utility the flexibility to integrate renewable technologies such as solar panels and wind turbines, charge electrical vehicles, reduce peak demand, lower energy costs and reduce pollution.

The project is supported by Sustainable Development Technology Canada.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGLX0mKjmwA?list=UUPO0OTx9uIymuYmG_Ss1AEQ]

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